The Daily Favorite. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 167, Ed. 1 Monday, March 1, 1909 Page: 3 of 4
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VOHI’I ft.
[kang busii
‘ i»g in
|g bank.
Jus to affo
|your deposit
ike care of y0
kwful HcxcLiaJ
■ result of •-yes-traii 1
be relieved i,v | ~
[gi—w. Hate
by • Permanently i
tan, who gtuuantc
id is here u> back
itl up. Exaau
duplicated ui|
liml.
Bowman
and Optician ^
A Beynold’s Dmr
6 tore
Eawre. f>f mtm
tide of any kind
As Soon as the Tu
work mating
life. It viil
lisacre amount of l_
Ip, and during its
:rst cost of the i»
>uch better quality l
(»y about the Tud|
& Gas
NS
residence property, j
|v**e, and furnish]
W«* advance
IkI up. >' •
Nunn
mum
DGEi
fary Insurance
132 2r
(Si Co. |
USEES
Rm. Pbooe IG *i
sHei
.nee Phonr 31
VANS &
ishing, Me ,
«« cured nie «»&
l Sttindei' I*rug'
t a owk * ho'
h tokens »UUD
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'
‘•-■qS
_Th# Ynr ot Gcnliu-1800
ntenary * Edgar Allan Poe
By Oliver Leigh 0
o pWMl Hi torture, Pbi rhymad sat
print'd It to 1M7. thinking that to tbla
gala* It wntM surely nrvlTt, But
Oriswold waa Ida literary executor and
daatroyad many paper*. There appear
to be only three copies of the satire In
exlateoca. Two days after Poe died
Griswold wrote tlrls lu the New York
Tribune: "Edgar Allan Poe I* dead
This annouucerueut will startle many,
but few will be grieved by It. • • •
He waa well known In all tbla country:
be bud readera In Kuglaud aud In aev
oral of the states of Europe, but he
had few or no friends.” There last
__OR many ed, and a lodger to help pay the rent, words were printed in Italics.
IT years the TlM! women bud llwlr bauds full all “The Gold Bug” the “Literati” pa
A writer e*»- **>e lime. Poe kept a j*et cat und uu P«rs ami “The llaveu” had capped his
. ,uor0 „r occaalonal bird to give a poetical llnUb faun* with a triple < rowu when in ifMts
i '5.* intimate ac- ,w ,hc Highta ami sounda of Ida “home, be look the Immblc frame house In the
i: ii.eol Itnfnn ** va-l.i/.li vl-uu a lu.. I • I I lion eiieol oiil.nxl. L' 1l.____ ■ >
J-Pa*i De*
d | Israel—His
i«n - Por m
Hi. T«a#c had.
Copyright, 1909, by the
Amesican Preas Aaociabon
'nxvi'vlng'friends *hoP- Mr*- Gtounn thus doacrlbea him: waa Uailcd aa the bright particular star
Kddie was domestic In all his habits. of the literary firmament. High so
WHJ, sweet home." which was also Ida work- then rural suburb of Kurd ham. Poe
’.'A
of i*oe. Including
hiti champion,
George It. Gra-
ham, owner of
Graham's Maga-
zine; John Sar-
sel.iom leaving home tor an hour unless ‘clcty and the elect among the cultured
his <1aiiIn* Virginia or myself was with . r v______ . , .
him. lie was truly an affect Iona te, kind .'5 '^OV .Vuarmal to llonizt* him its
th<“ aristocracy of Edinburgh did Rob
ert I turns, once lion of the tribe of
Demos, but under the petting and pum
paring of bis tilled patrons soon dwin-
dled to poodle «lze aud tuned his bark,
to whine “a lord's a lord for a' I hat.”
Poe was no toudy; be worsld[»cd ideal
creutures of his soaring imagination
husband and a devoted son to me. lie
was Impulsive, generous, affectionate und
noble. Ills tastes were very simple and
his u dm I ration for all that waa good and
tain, the emlneut beautiful very grout,
engraver, of Sur- I'm? became editor of the Gentle
tain’s Magazine, man's Magazine in Philadelphia aud
and -Mrs. Nichols, left it in a year to edit Graham's, lie
the Mary Govtv gained another $100 prize with his
who found Vir- "Gold Bug.” After four years of hard ®“‘1 ’God to see the goddess In every
glulu ao weak work on these lines he returned to edit W,,!U1'U "ho won his reverence. He
one day In what the New York Mirror aud in 1845 Kliru,ll; *roni conviviality <.f the boozy
soon became her gained world fame and gill- by "The *',*u<* a* *,r”m patronage that eonde
deathbed that she ltuvcu." At lust, in this mi me year, Ut mu®"ls. My life, he w-rltes to Low-
eould not shake became editor of the. Broadway .lour- *'*’ b *en whim, impulse, passion
off the cat which quI and owner of it in six mouths, in /or *,<>nii1y and for poetry
was lying on her spit* of his fume aud brilliant labor * ’ ‘ J’ ,s l1* ,n"‘sl expression), a long
breast. This led it died to two mouths from wenkuess ,UR ^°r solitude, a scorn of all things
lo substantial aid of the money chest. present.” He consented 1o attend an
110 the suffering family jUst when bis "Llterail" papers in reception where one writes
We at Ford ham. Godey’s lady’s Book bad raised him hl\ '* ‘h* ob*e,Twl of “L‘1ol«frTpr^,
freeoi lee Gobs of these |0 tbc pinnacle of popularity a libel "'“I b'!‘,r hu' rew!** *be nave*,
make a composite pic- was Inserted in the Evening Mirror by w,,>' h h« doe* verv d'JieU/. •* an event
t* S young «an he was Thomas Dunn Eugtiab, biller rival of W*» Ufa.
j attractive appearance, poe in the rhyming bualuum, whose whitman, :i poei Lerseif of tbe
Hetlv handsome; romau literary fame rents on tbe melodv wuich whoo) and » woman of cxeep-
1 * j{e. tlonnt culture and position, deec-nbes
Edjar Po" In *».*ch'l.v;
|with the pal? ?*"t floated bis gong. ‘‘Ob. Dor/« To
tbe (lBttsfiat effect of member Bweet Alie*. Belt ftoUV
ility, Ula face was al-
Tbe rather top heavy
brehead lent an air of
the general placid ex-
pire. Poe describes Ids
ilelbato Hebrew model."
Igiv so. ID* continues:
liouid, luminous; lips ,hlcflv his Micrarv criticisms. '«r- t0 «*• serene wisdom of Ahoit and
— * * t •-a>, unvrwl memivra hie abtitetirtol fPfltll
HIS LESSON.
Mr. K. Augustus Dubb*
Ventured In a woman’s club
One Sne winter day;
Started out to blandly toll
I tow th# ladles might axcsl
If Ihss’ would for juat a spall
Do all things Ida way.
I’nderiMMth Ids manly vest
Seeded a large, protruding chest.
And he felt Ilia glow
Of the pride that to a man
Comes the moment that he cou
Outline fur the ones a plan
Who are down helow.
But. alas, and pily sake,
J’rldc u tumble has to take.
Dignity gets stung.
When the ladies started In
ghowltip where his talk was thin.
Then Ills head beran to spin.
Rooted was his tongue.
Hhowed him that mere man was not
Such a proposition hot
Ami Unit Women were
On to him and all his tricks.
Larger than a ton of bricks;
Tliut he was a child of six
Or a good sized blur.
TCSTEO AND PROVEN
Tkcrc is • fkg# *f S*tec* In Bffinf AMe
to Depend Upw a Wdl-f*rocd
VtNOl CURES CHRONIC COUCHS
CaWs mi
After Other
Remedies Pail.
“I have Ixwn troubled with h
chronic cold utul bronchitis for a
Ioiik time and have tried many
rcmcdieN without (hiding relief.
Satan’s Specialty.
Poe won bis sail, tar a wouder, aud, As a conversationalist 1 do iu»t remem-
oalnwliif m rat. I b*V# t tAl4 tbd Veleiafl
miracle of tnlratle*. #rtuall> got a vei- vt’auar savage t.sndor (called the bast
diet of g22T» damages and pocketed the talker in rcngisndi discuss with scathing
c-agh! sarcasm the pttpuUr writers of the day.
„„ ,u„ --rli.r wiiii, • • * 1 tiave listened to the Irenrhant and
Year* ago the present writer while v(vM UJ|l of autocrfcl (0|iv.r wen-
ranwKklug old magazines lo unearth U(>n Holtnee). to th* brilliant colloquial
the miscellaneous prose contributed by resources of John Neal and Margerot Ful
„d n-ry P»lll4l, b.l.f „p .1,nrl.W IMM
orve; a nnely moult'd outitled "The Pool* and Poetry of |'U*er of these wo* the earnest, opulent,
lu Its want of prooi- America by l.avanle," in the • atalOBUc unpremeditated speech of Kdgar A. Poc
r.r';2;r
Ity, left to grow nil uu- pUatiou, prefaced by Ills toplofty til-* wholly unconventional courtesy and grace
t It floated rather Ilian ,rjbuti«n of laurels aud damuutlOD, "f manner and an Imperious enthusiasm
face ” which had stirred Poe to fierce surras
nil dljrntly of presence, jp. wrath and was also the title lie
1 movement, n praclous ,.how, yor a ie<-ture he gave first in the
h^t the right moment. N„w yort Hlgtorieal soc iety’s library
lu rebruary. 1845, timl in other cities. I
was curious to aoe it.. It was a satire
in the rhymed couplets now out of
fashiou. it satirized three aud thirty
of the poetical writers of the day
Tbeir names were printed in capital-*. "T " *•'
and I was ail excitement to see What ,efT t”° M ‘ ‘1 L
It said of Poe, tin* one strong figure
who towered bead and shoulders above
his would be rivals, wl»o belittled when
they did not bate and malign ldm.
Poe wan not among tbe thirty aud
three!
This atari led me luto recolleoilug . , ^
that Poe liked and used fancy names. I . 1 . *
One was "Ia»Uge." This satire was by the fre
"I>avaute.” The poem. flfiO line* loug.
opened with a dellcions burlesque of
Griswold, self bloWn into u make be-
lieve god, reviewing and Judging his
Inferiors, the thirty-three poets, as they
humbly passed before him. This Is
melodious voice, his en
jny company wna an lui-
kt lu conversation be
[bore, but ever ready to
bis varied store if en-
bnd tbe inherited taste
interpretation of genuine
was constantly deligbt-
ud public audiences with
reciting* of bts own best
With all his austerity
uvial as tbe rest iu the
nid fellowship, sparkling
aor. quip or satirical gibe.
Iiderstand the charm of
inatlon of qualities. Tbe
|arly when the aureole of
him king, is always in
1 a [Killed by adoration. So
|tal>lo that Poe would ul-
tra la of beauties, gen-
klowored maids and ma-
il; to do homage at his
aery first charmer was a
1 whom he. In his teens,
lith I be memories of ro
lhdi heroines aud scenes.
|h!i * <! : the only creature
'love of course she soon
for out of the ardent |><s-(
’Helen" (her cnrili name
flbk’h was loo prosaic for
lil evermore in his pure
<*f bis vacant heart, the
M probably all his inoat
fills
Pome a succession of true
|er>. of Poe tbe [met, worn-
Jricd or not, overflow with
of all cotnpelllug sytnpa-
ininl souls in torment. He
(mu ried to ibe child Vir
lint uncultured daughter
fotnnn. then in the crush-
with grimy poverty, 1°
fears steadily added con-
tbe jKior girl, cumulative
j the mother and corroding
ilow despair for the |>o*t-
'niter fetters:. There was
ter. bis first young flirt.
years later in Ids last
Ife was there, a wealthy
p.v i*> marry and save him.
Tlmt was love, and she
* s weeds for him. Mrs.
Skew, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs.
os! devoted of them alt.
(have mu-Tied him as his
V of atl the distresses ot
which brought all hearers within ill* cir-
cle of Us Influence.
Virginia died in January. 1847 Mrs.
f’lnmiu had now a heavier burden In
her well loved
Eddie's distress-
ing maladies. All
ibis fawning of
lackadala I o a 1
dolls of society
> h i
"msiw**u.
For mouths Bonham readera
have Mien the constant expression
of prainc lor l)oan’N Kiduey Pilln,
aud read atiout the good work they j Through the kind suggest ion ot a
have done in thia locality. Not I'rieml I tiied Vinol, aiul afU-r Lik
another remedy ever produced such ing four bottles, am entirely eur
a convincing proof of merit. ed.” A. II. Wilde, 7.TI 8th ave-
Mra. T. Q. Townsend, living on »»ne, Minneapolis, Minn.
West 10th st., Bonham, Texas, B. McDonald, 147 W. Congress
says: “I have a goo<t opinion of street, 8t. I’aul, Minn., writes: “I
Doan's Kidney Pills because of eontiacted a severe cold last win
the benefit I derived from their b*1 timl thought 1 would never get
use. 1 was liothered off and on rid of it. 1 tried Vinol as a last
for some time by pains iu my back resort, and it has completely cured
and hips The kidney secretions me."
were also a source of annoyance, Vinol combines two world fain
lieing scanty and very unnatural ed tonics, the healing, medicinal
iu appearance. I soon began to piopertiua of cod liver oil and
feel tired und languid and seemed tome iron, deliciously palatable
to have lost all strength and liter- und agreeable to the weakest atom
jgy. .Knowingof the good results nth. Korthisreason,Viholisuh-
| that had followed the use of Doan’s excelled aa a strength builder for
j Kidney Pills iu Mr. Townsend’s old people, delicate children, weak
(case, l was induced to give them a and run down persons, after sick-
tria . They soon banished the ness and for chronic coughs, colds
pains iu my Lack and corrected timl bronchitis,
the action of the kidney secretions. | Vinol is sold in Bonhatn by
This remedy can be procured at Saunders Drug Co.
the Saunders Drug < 'o.
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milbnrn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the Uni
ted States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—
and take no other. 52
A mail’s gratitude for a favor
done him is mostly a bid for more.
r
Satan isn’t iKHTsaaril.v fond of idle
people. Ills apeHalty la in getting Idle
people busy.
Too Bad.
"Tin-re are a lot of thing* that l
would like to know."
"Are there';”
"Ye.*."
“My ease is worse Umn that.”
"What Is it?”
"There are a lot of things that I do
know that l want not to know.”
family chin deep
in the old pover-
ty, While Foe
was making fine
poetry at. home
Id* bravo luulh-
i or - iu - law was
quently hopeless
Henrcli for pub-
I (shorn, with
hearts as soft a*
boiled paving
“ atones, prepureil
surely tbe work of Foe, tbongbt I. the ( , n’v
treatment of liie poets mtundod re
markabiy like Foe’s language in hia
magazine reviews and paragraph*. A
thorough search, lasting some six or
oiglit vnrU. elided in ihe piitolieation
of a reprint of Ijivanle’s ikmmii. with
reference* !*■ parallel passages In Foe’s
prose. «lik'li no doubt formed the sub
stance of bis lecture, no ivporis of
which could be found In the New York
or Fhlladelptda pa|M>rs. Autlel|>utlng
the eritictsm or makeshift for It which
whole dollar* on
pen work of im-
perishable a r i .
Like the strong
saimmer in bis
siriking brnvoly
Juat a Scow.
“Was the rest of tbe ticket defeat oil
with yon’:’’
"Yes; we weut down together.” 1
“Then you are all in the same Ik>uL”
"Yes. and It isn’t a lifeboat either.”
“Still, It may do nicely for Salt river
navigation.”
A PoMr.
“Why ore we all ao solflah?”
“Because we can't help ourselves."
"No.”
“No?"
"No; because It is when we do help
ourselves that we are accused of It."
Cautious,
"Are you a good little boy, my son?”
“Na w.”
"Why?"
"I ain’t aimin’ to be no suicide.”
A Religious Author’s Statement.
Rev. Joseph H. Fespermau, Sal
____ isbury, N. C., who is the author of
, ... several books, writes: “For sever
There s nothings woman can ui years I was afflicted with kidney
worry more about than her age trouble and last winter I war
after 30 except tbe age of her uu- suddenly stricken with a sever*
married daughter after 24. Pain in my kidneys and was con
_ lined to bod eight days unable U
Soldier Balks Death Plot. «ef UP without assistance. Mv
. 0. ... urine contained a thick white sedi
It secmed;to J. A. Stone, a civil meut and ! pa8SeuKame frequently
war veteran, of Kemp, Tex., that day and night. I commenced tak
a plot existed between a desperate »ng Foley’s Kidney Remedy, and
lung trouble and the grave to cause Pa‘n gradually abated and tin
his death. “I contracted a stub al|y «***] a,»d my urine became
born eohl‘” he writes, “that de V,™1' ch^fully^recommend
velopcd a cough that stuck to me JS ru^ Bcmedy-”-Saun
in spite of all remedies, lor years. u ™ J rug <
My weight ran down to 130
pounds. Then 1 began to use Dr. The trouble with a divorce is
| King’s New Discovery, which re that no insurance goes with it
stored my health completely. I against do ng it again.
| uow weigh 178 pounds. For se-
vere colds, obstinate coughs, hem i „ ’ .....
orrhagea, asthma, and to prevent ,Iow fn 11,1 > I>er8,on nsk, tuk‘,lg
pueumania it’s unrivaled 50c Home unknown cough remedy when
and $1. Trial liottle free. Guar } o,e> 8 and ,Tar ^ thon
an teed by Saunders Drug Go. »°. moreV U 18 a safe reracdf» 00,1
* taius no harmlul drugs, aim cures
■" the most olistinato coughs and
Sunday piety will not make up colds. Why experiment with your
for six days’ depravity.
Jf£we could; laolk t you person
ally about thefgreat merit of Fo
health? Insist upon having the
genuine Foley’s Honey and Tar.—
Saunders Drug Company.
The devil has such a good time
i ley’s Honey and Tar, for coughs, at bis regular business he nevei
colds and lung trouble, you never takes any vacation.
could be induct'd to experiment --
with unknown preparations that
may contain some harmful drugs.
Foley’s Honey and Tar costs you
no more and has a record of forty
poe BrcrriNij “Till:
WAX KX.”
Agiiu.v. «c s«*a him
tilu* ri.'iui:
wave Hull promise# lo bear him lo the
chore till another fails upon him with
sluKKeriiq; force und downs him for a
last maddening effort. If ever a val-
iant Ktruxgler glared with brain and
kitnd to earn modest happiness for
only three lone sonla, if ever mortal
endured keener pans of a brain daiu !
aged from lnfaney or earlier and of
the wearing, endle** ilrln of sorrows
from without, false lrtendahipB, starve
liug’a wuges, the rich man’s aloofness
ami the xluudera of the malicious and
the thoughtless. Hull grim martyr was
Edgar Foe.
Uniter this dread sires* "lie walked
tbe streets in madness or melancholy
(it is Griswold who tells what he lmd
witnessed), with lips moving tu India
llnct curses or with eyes upturned in
passionate prayers for their happiness
who were at that moment the objects
of his idolatry, or with a face slireiuh'd
lu doom ho would brave tbe wildest
storms, nod all night, with drenched
garments and arms wildly beating the
wind and rain, be would speak as if to
spirits."
Mrs. Whitman, good soul and brave,
would have risked her happy life to
Eats Thsm Aliv*.
“is he a vegetarian?"
"No; he I* a Wall street broker.”
"What’s that got to do with it?"
"lit* favorite diet Is lamb."
Vain.
"You are fund of briglil children,
aren’t you?”
"Oh, yes; I always like my own.”
Simple Remedy for la Grippe.
La grippe coughs are dangerous
as they frequently develop inti'
pneumonia. Foley’s Honey and
years of cures.-Sold by Saunders Tar not only stops the cough but
Drut: Co heals and strengthens the lungs so
” ’ that no serious results need be
feared. The genuine Foley’s Hon
One song in the heart is 1 tetter ,.v and Tar contains no harmful
than two in the next Hat,
drugs and is in a yellow package
Refuse substitutes .— Maunders
I) i ug Co.
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
IteiOK optlmiHtie on a good salary
Isn't half had. but when he Is up
aguiuat it rl<;lit an optimistic man lias
(o have the real thing to keep prac-
ticing optimum).
From your own point of view the
other fellow hasn't a tiling to look at.
A man’s wife can't even kec|
him on the water wagon by telling
predicts h*
Revolts at ColdSleet.
“Yum only hope,” said three
, doctors to Mis. M. !'. Fisher, De-
troit, Midi., suffering from ucveie him how her mother
! rectal troubles, lies in an opera- will full off.
! tiou, then I used Dr. King’s New
! Life Pills,” she writes, “till whol-
ly cured.” They prevent apjiendi-
| citLs, cure constipation, headache.
1 25c ut Saunders Drug Co.
If you ure shrewd enough to save !
yourself from your friends, your en«- !
mlcs won’t stand much show with yon. j
The woman
weep is no longer young
mi I* TUX THOOKS OP eOMPOBITIOK.
the reviewers might rely on In their
esr mm m
Washington Oic Gav' Up
to three doctors; was kept in bed
for live weeks. Blood poison from
a spider’s btte caused larg'j deep
sores to cover his leg. The doctors
who has ceased to failed, then “Bucklea’s Arnica
Salve completely cured me,”
writes John Washington, of Bos
Mam lug is often a question of i “My 3 year old boy was badly queville, Tex. For ecxeraa, boil*
money and come to iliink of it, w hat ; constipated, had a high fever and burns and piles it’s supreme. 25c
Un’tv" , was in an awful condition. I gave at i)rug Oo.
him two doses ol Foley s Orino —
Nobody ever got u good repuiaiioit 'Laxative and the next morning i Th i .inenunt a doe is thi
by taking away somebody elae’a. I thc fCVcr was gone an«l he was en 1 ‘h . .. * J g
; tirely well. Foley s <)rino Laxa ",ore a ^ th,nkH of h,,H'
A man who i* kept busy preaching liv,. savc,i life.’’ A. Wolkuth, | --------
undoubtmII.v expert, to be Cagimer \Vis.—.Suunders Drug Co. Foley's Honey and Tar cun -
coughs quickly, strengthens the
lungs and expels colds,. Oct th*
Due reason why j I'hcre is nothing Hatter than genuine in a yellow package.—
from practice.
| Intellectual, good and
'r * I1"®' devotee of family
« duty found his virtue a
f*®w* from the popular
(point of view, It was B4-
Hurfarc aspect, more than tragical u*
tbe Blaylng before its time of a geniu* {
that had atamlua of Ita own to have ;
roundtel’ out a full life If fate had
played fairly.
Tbe atopy loving public will never
let Foe die. nor tbe lovers of Jeweled
inimitable artificer,
<'Ui;x>uringB of pure nyin- remarkable a production 1» uot "one
I'*" inikflings <»f giddy but of the boye.’ The New York Eveulng
H'e Kisterly cheer of mi I’o*t admitted that the claim waa
proved.
Nearly twenty years later the anouy-
moiiH eat ire and Foe's parallel passages
were republished, with other new ma-
■ ^ N ii wna m* terlal. A great *lally helped itself to . . .. «rtiitj-ar am
► fate had not drifted him half nagrful «f the original drawings vt.™ by ‘ ro^ot trwin*.l
f «• household lo his callow of Foe’s face; a monthly followed *ult. b° J^^mlng genera
^'tbt have had his choice *nd many papers gave good apace to ijfto forge* that In
*• o( wlety in the north •«» book, but not one of our P«hM* Hon* t«.
MLfts asaasir
11 way. tbe same a stmole pered life X take H that In prend do and coaybe to abars fmar»r toe umdo
a*< oraat&r fTratot Iun of tho hootlis prore which sup the totounddigtood.
i ■',h »./:' ;
.
r%A£~Z*MmyT?)
com* riNiin /
| THIS SOW- |
• :ommou sense is !
so seldom met j
with Is because It |
is rather partlen
lar about It* com- ,
pany.
Then* lire a lot j
of people who
have n great Imb J
it of taking re
sponsiMlity and
l heu cheerfully
shunting it npon
B-T-t wimebody else
Itelng able to recognise U»e ps.veo-
ngii-gl nsinH-iit l* evidence of vonr
genius <m else of your nerve.
Ileiug Jns< a little less foolish than
tb« majority t<essi'» for wisdom in this
gray old world of «sr«
flattery that doesn't flatter.
Saunders Drug Oo.
Womans1
Nightmare
No woman can be happy
without children; it is hp'
nature to love them as much
$o as it is the beautiful and
pure, The ordeal through
which thc expectant mother
must pass is so hill of dread that the thought fills her with apprehensior
There is no necessity for the reproduction of life to be either very
painful or dangerous. The use of Mother’* Frtond prepares the system
for the coming event, and it_is passed without any danger. Thu*
remedy is applied externally, “
and has carried thousands of
women through thc crisis
with but little suffering.
finok ennui*)** Informal)** ot value
to all napafUot moUrnra mBm fm.
it is passed without any danger. inw
MOTHERS
I FRIEND !
; b
> M
Mil
II
|:
ml
•V
HI
■worm ' i
sir v v.v
mm
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Spotts, W. S. The Daily Favorite. (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 167, Ed. 1 Monday, March 1, 1909, newspaper, March 1, 1909; Bonham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth976155/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.